Dayton Daily News

Ohio State women top Northeaste­rn, play for national championsh­ip today

- By Nicole Haase

The Ohio State women’s hockey team will have a chance to defend its national championsh­ip thanks to a 3-0 NCAA semifinal win over Northeaste­rn on Friday.

The Buckeyes face Wisconsin for the championsh­ip at 4 today.

The Buckeyes dominated Northeaste­rn, outshootin­g the Huskies 53-15 and controllin­g the puck for much of the game. They scored their first goal 76 seconds into the game. Freshman Sloane Matthews buried the rebound on a Kenzie Hauswirth pass to make it 1-0. It’s telling of the Buckeyes’ depth that a third-line rookie was the one that scored the game-winning goal.

But a season of preparing for this moment left Matthews confident and able to get over her nerves the moment the puck dropped.

“I was nervous before the game,” she said. “Immediatel­y as I slipped on the ice, everything just went away, and I really dialed in.”

Northeaste­rn coach Dave Flint said Ohio State was the better team and that his squad was unable to generate offense. He compared the game to a track meet and said his team could not keep up.

Flint’s assessment was confirmati­on that the focused relentless­ness that is the hallmark of coach Nadine Muzerall’s success with the Buckeyes has the desired effect of tiring opponents, frustratin­g skaters and making Ohio State difficult to play against.

At every point the Huskies had difficulty mustering the speed, finesse and fast play that led them to their third straight Frozen Four and sixth straight Hockey East title.

“I’ve coached hockey in Division I as an assistant and as a head coach,” Muzerall said, “and honestly that is probably the best hockey game that I have ever coached in terms of pride in what my team accomplish­ed.”

Northeaste­rn looked to tie late in the first period, but Muzerall immediatel­y challenged the goal for a hand pass. She said she saw the play and went with her gut and had her decision to call for the challenge confirmed by Sophie Jaques, who was tangled up in the play in question.

The goal was overturned and Ohio State maintained momentum. Early in the second, the Buckeyes killed a long 5-on-3 power play by pushing the Huskies to the perimeter and not letting pucks through the middle. Those two plays were major turning points for Ohio State and served to build its confidence.

“You have to go with your trusted horse,” Muzerall said of her penalty killing unit on the 5-on-3. “We put out our veterans and they were composed. They knew what was at stake. I was very proud of their stick positionin­g and blocking shots.”

One way Muzerall has been able to build and grow the program is through transfer players. Makenna Webster moved to Ohio State from Wisconsin to become a two-sport athlete in field and ice hockey. She missed time with Muzerall’s team at the beginning of the season as she closed out the field hockey schedule. But she has been worth the wait. She put a fine point on that by scoring the Buckeyes’ second goal.

Midway through the second period she took a centering pass from senior Jenn Gardiner between the faceoff circles and one-timed it into the net.

Hadley Hartmetz is in her second season with the Buckeyes after starting her career at Boston College. The senior scored with under two minutes to play in the second, putting the game out of reach.

“We put a lot of lethal shots on net,” Muzerall said. “We had great goaltendin­g, and all through our depth chart everybody stepped up. We trusted everybody on the ice and they made great things happen. To be that relentless, poised and composed at the same time spoke volumes about our mental and physical ability.

“If you want to win, you have to do all the little things — away from the puck too — to be a champion.”

In the other semifinal, Wisconsin defeated Minnesota 3-2.

Jaques wins Kazmaier Award as top player in NCAA this season

Ohio State defender Sophie Jaques won the Patty Kazmaier Award, given to the top player in women’s NCAA Division I hockey.

Jaques, from Toronto, is the first Buckeye to win the award and the second-ever defender. She helped Ohio State to a 33-5-2 record and a berth in today’s NCAA national title game against Wisconsin.

Jaques led all NCAA defenders in points (48), goals (24), power-play goals (9) and points per game (1.23) through 40 games. On the Buckeyes’ top defensive pairing, Jaques helped hold opponents to 1.75 goals per game and blocked 55 shots.

“Receiving this award is something I never even could have imagined was possible,” Jaques said in a statement, adding later, “While this is an individual award, I have been supported by a whole team of people throughout this season and my career at Ohio State, and I owe this all to my coaches and teammates.”

The 22-year-old engineerin­g major was among the three Kazmaier finalists last year.

 ?? AP ?? Northeaste­rn forward Mia Brown falls along the boards after colliding with Ohio State forward Gabby Rosenthal in the third period of Friday’s national semifinal.
AP Northeaste­rn forward Mia Brown falls along the boards after colliding with Ohio State forward Gabby Rosenthal in the third period of Friday’s national semifinal.

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